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Criterions查看 Criterions 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • Whats the accepted way to use criterion, criteria, criterions?
    @Kris Well, I don't think it's particularly complex—I talk about criteria, criterion and criterions for three sentences, and then address the OP's examples I'll add Wiktionary links to the first two paragraphs, but not everything necessarily needs to be cited 100% of the time
  • What is the difference between a final draft and a final version?
    What is your native language? At the end of writing drafts (first, second, etc), you get a first version of something and that could be the final one as well if no more changes are made to it It depends on the process where you work or for whom you work BUT: final rough version is not used in this lingo Unless you use that term instead of draft I am sure these differences exist in most
  • Family do or does? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    "Family" is a collective noun That is, it is a noun that refers to a group as a single entity There are many collective nouns in English Other examples are "committee", "team", or for that matter, "group" In American English, a collective noun takes a singular verb "My family does " "The team is " "The group has " Etc I understand that British English has different conventions
  • Which form of punctuation is correct for whereas?
    Your first example is certainly far more common usage than the second It is quite rare to need punctuation both before and after a single word, and that is not one of them Indeed, I cannot think of any example in common, modern usage where a semi-colon would come directly after "whereas" - that word is mainly used to join two phrases, whereas a semi-colon is used to separate them
  • word request - British Packet = American X? - English Language . . .
    Longman Dictionary says: packet [countable]: 1 (British English) a container made of paper, plastic, or cardboard that something is sold in 2 (especially British English) a small flat package
  • vocabulary - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I'm writing a text where I have to reference 3 different entities The "creator" of a document, which is the person who launched the request in a software system for the document to be created (ak
  • It didnt help us any, is this common? - English Language Learners . . .
    Actually, I don't think this usage is at all common The specific cited example does occur in informal conversational contexts (more often in AmE rather than BrE), but apart from contexts involving negated help, I can't think of any other places where it occurs You can't normally say things like I didn't like him any, for example (or if you do, it'll probably be taken as a sure-fire indicator
  • grammar - Has seen? Had seen? Had saw? Has saw? - English Language . . .
    Could someone explain (in simple terms) which of the following are correct, and if they are correct, when to use them? Thanks has seen had seen had saw has saw Is this just a memoriz
  • thrive in vs thrive on - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    And what does this sentence mean? Some people thrive in fast-paced, deadline-heavy careers, while others prefer less stimulating work Can I replace 'thrive on' with 'thrive in" ? Probably not, but what would it mean if I did?
  • Can it be used to refer to a person? - English Language Learners . . .
    The Wikipedia page on dummy pronouns expressly states: "Unlike a regular pronoun of English, it cannot be replaced by any noun phrase (except for, rhetorically permitting, something like 'the state of affairs' or 'the fact of the matter' )" It's hard to tell if they're referring to dummy pronouns in general with that distinction, or if they're referring only to the given example "It is raining





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